Publications & Testimony
Items: 5411 — 5420
Jul 21, 2005
Federal Death Penalty in Non-Death Penalty States
The federal death penalty was reinstated in 1988 with a limited statute for murders in the course of a drug conspiracy. It was expanded to 60 offenses in 1994 and included crimes such as carjacking and drive-by shootings if a death results. During the Clinton administration, no one from a non-death penalty state was sentenced to death. Since 2000, there have been at least 5 individuals in non-death states who have received death sentences: 2 in Iowa (Dustin Honken and Angela Johnson), 1 in…
Read MoreJul 19, 2005
Massachusetts Governor’s Proposed Death Penalty Law Meets Strong Opposition at Hearing
Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney recently testified that the proposed “foolproof” death penalty statute he hopes will bring capital punishment back to the state does not eliminate the possibility that an innocent person could be executed. Romney acknowledged to members of the joint House and Senate Judiciary Committee that the proposed law cannot protect the state against the potential for human error, stating, “A 100 percent guarantee? I don’t think there’s such a thing in life. Except…
Read MoreJul 19, 2005
POSSIBLE INNOCENCE: Doubts Linger About Guilt of Arizona Juvenile Offender
More than a decade after juvenile offender Martin Soto Fong and two other men were tried and sentenced to death in Arizona, questions about Fong’s guilt linger and are underscored by the fact that he is the only one of the three men to remain convicted of the crime. The prosecutor who won their convictions, Kenneth Peasley, was disbarred last year for intentionally eliciting false testimony to win capital murder convictions in the re-trials of Soto’s co-defendants, Christopher McCrimmon and…
Read MoreJul 19, 2005
NEW VOICES: Former Texas Death Row Chaplain — In His Own Words
The Reverend Carroll Pickett, former chaplain on death row in…
Read MoreJul 16, 2005
Criticism of “Streamlined Procedures Act” Grows
A variety of legal experts and national organizations have expressed strong concerns about a bill introduced in Congress that would greatly limit federal review of death penalty cases. The American Bar Association called for rejection of the legislation: S. 1088 should not be enacted. Its primary effect would be to insure that the federal courts did not hear compelling claims – including claims of actual innocence. Any possible gain in speed would be offset by the certain loss of justice. As…
Read MoreJul 15, 2005
Execution of Arguably Innocent Man Spurs Reaction
Following an investigation indicating that Missouri may have executed an innocent man for the 1980 murder of Quintin Moss, New York Times columnist Bob Herbert wrote that the case was filled with problems that are typical of wrongful convictions in capital cases. Herbert stated that St. Louis circuit attorney Jennifer Joyce has taken “the extraordinary step of officially reopening a murder investigation after the defendant was executed,” adding that it is difficult to prove that an innocent…
Read MoreJul 12, 2005
Investigation Finds Executed Man May Have Been Innocent
A year-long investigation by the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund has uncovered evidence that Larry Griffin may have been innocent of the crime for which he was executed by the state of Missouri on June 21, 1995. Griffin maintained his innocence until his death, and investigators say his case is the strongest demonstration yet of an execution of an innocent man. The report notes that a man injured in the same drive-by shooting that claimed the life of Quintin Moss says Griffin was not…
Read MoreJul 12, 2005
Supreme Court Grants Last Minute Stay of Execution
The U.S. Supreme Court granted a last minute stay for Robin Lovitt, who was scheduled for execution at 9 PM on Monday (July 11) in Virginia. The Court did not give a reason for the stay, but Lovitt stated that he would have been able to show his innocence if state officials had not destroyed DNA evidence from his case after his trial. (See item below posted July 8). (Associated Press, July 11, 2005). See also…
Read MoreJul 11, 2005
Proposed Legislation Would Starkly Limit Federal Review of Death Penalty Appeals
A bill proposed by Rep. Daniel Lungren of California and Sen. Jon Kyl of Arizona would strip the federal courts of much of their power to decide whether death row inmates have been given a fair trial and could result in the execution of innocent defendants. The bill is entitled the Streamlined Procedures Act of 2005. The Washington Post editorialized about the…
Read MoreJul 08, 2005
Doubts Raised About Guilt in Upcoming Virginia Execution
Robin Lovitt is scheduled for execution on July 11 in Virginia despite doubts about his guilt and the state’s weak and circumstantial case against him. Lovitt’s attorneys maintain that DNA testing of evidence in his case would prove that he is not guilty of the 1998 murder of Clayton Dicks, but the tests are not possible because a court clerk mistakenly destroyed the evidence. Columnist Margaret Edds of the The Virginian-Pilot recently wrote about the upcoming execution and the doubts that…
Read More